LEO's Eats with Robin Garr
Tea Station Chinese Bistro's Mongolian Lamb

There we were, Mary and I, sitting and chatting as we waited for our apps in the comfortably cozy confines of Tea Station Chinese Bistro. We sipped Tsing Tao beers and gazed out at the main drag of Norton Commons, the new subdivision with the old-time look, trying to figure out why this village somehow feels both appealing and a little creepy all at the same time.
Norton Commons was Louisville's first large venture into the "New Urbanism" (or at least the first since St. James Court was developed in 1887). Hey, New Urbanism is cool! Something new, made to look old, compact and walkable, retro in style, quaint but, um, "safe."
So what's not to like?
"It's a little too much like Epcot," Mary mused. Yeah, I can see that. The grid is too neat, the streetscape too even. The streetscape evokes real urban neighborhoods with their front porches lined up in a row, but it does not look like St. James Court, the Highlands or Crescent Hill. Here a Georgian, there a Victorian, over there a veranda'd bungalow right out of the Deep South. It's sort of like a quick Epcot tour from France to Italy to China, stopping just long enough to indulge in a giant crepe or ice cream cone.
Or Chinese food! Which brings us back to Tea Station, a place that - sort of like an Epcot eatery - is a nicely decorated, upscale, family-style Chinese-American eatery in a setting that's slightly fancy without requiring dress-up attire.
Tea Station has new owners within the past year or so, but local Chinese restaurant veteran Roland Wong, now a managing partner, remains in the front of the house with his cordial presence setting the tone. The bill of fare now bears a fair resemblance to the huge but standard selection that you'll find in your typical chopsticks-house-next-door-to-a-Kroger.
In short, it's neighborhood Chinese, friendly and accommodating, but hardly challenging. If you're seeking "authentic" Chinese - beef tripe or sea cucumber or chicken feet - you'll want to look elsewhere. ...
Read the full review on LouisvilleHotBytes,
http://www.louisvillehotbytes.com/?p=5321
See this column also in LEO Weekly:
http://www.leoweekly.com/2015/07/new-ur ... n-commons/
Tea Station Chinese Bistro
9422 Norton Commons Blvd.
423-1202
http://teastationbistro.com
Robin Garr's rating: 79 points